Public Domain Poetry And Stories - A Discontented Sugar Broker by William Schwenck Gilbert
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A Discontented Sugar Broker

    By William Schwenck Gilbert



    A GENTLEMAN of City fame
    Now claims your kind attention;
    East India broking was his game,
    His name I shall not mention:
    No one of finely-pointed sense
    Would violate a confidence,
    And shall _I_ go
    And do it? No!
    His name I shall not mention.

    He had a trusty wife and true,
    And very cosy quarters,
    A manager, a boy or two,
    Six clerks, and seven porters.
    A broker must be doing well
    (As any lunatic can tell)
    Who can employ
    An active boy,
    Six clerks, and seven porters.

    His knocker advertised no dun,
    No losses made him sulky,
    He had one sorrow only one
    He was extremely bulky.
    A man must be, I beg to state,
    Exceptionally fortunate
    Who owns his chief
    And only grief
    Is being very bulky.

    "This load," he'd say, "I cannot bear;
    I'm nineteen stone or twenty!
    Henceforward I'll go in for air
    And exercise in plenty."
    Most people think that, should it come,
    They can reduce a bulging tum
    To measures fair
    By taking air
    And exercise in plenty.

    In every weather, every day,
    Dry, muddy, wet, or gritty,
    He took to dancing all the way
    From Brompton to the City.
    You do not often get the chance
    Of seeing sugar brokers dance
    From their abode
    In Fulham Road
    Through Brompton to the City.

    He braved the gay and guileless laugh
    Of children with their nusses,
    The loud uneducated chaff
    Of clerks on omnibuses.
    Against all minor things that rack
    A nicely-balanced mind, I'll back
    The noisy chaff
    And ill-bred laugh
    Of clerks on omnibuses.

    His friends, who heard his money chink,
    And saw the house he rented,
    And knew his wife, could never think
    What made him discontented.
    It never entered their pure minds
    That fads are of eccentric kinds,
    Nor would they own
    That fat alone
    Could make one discontented.

    "Your riches know no kind of pause,
    Your trade is fast advancing;
    You dance but not for joy, because
    You weep as you are dancing.
    To dance implies that man is glad,
    To weep implies that man is sad;
    But here are you
    Who do the two
    You weep as you are dancing!"

    His mania soon got noised about
    And into all the papers;
    His size increased beyond a doubt
    For all his reckless capers:
    It may seem singular to you,
    But all his friends admit it true
    The more he found
    His figure round,
    The more he cut his capers.

    His bulk increased no matter that
    He tried the more to toss it
    He never spoke of it as "fat,"
    But "adipose deposit."
    Upon my word, it seems to me
    Unpardonable vanity
    (And worse than that)
    To call your fat
    An "adipose deposit."

    At length his brawny knees gave way,
    And on the carpet sinking,
    Upon his shapeless back he lay
    And kicked away like winking.
    Instead of seeing in his state
    The finger of unswerving Fate,
    He laboured still
    To work his will,
    And kicked away like winking.

    His friends, disgusted with him now,
    Away in silence wended
    I hardly like to tell you how
    This dreadful story ended.
    The shocking sequel to impart,
    I must employ the limner's art
    If you would know,
    This sketch will show
    How his exertions ended.

    MORAL.

    I hate to preach I hate to prate
    - I'm no fanatic croaker,
    But learn contentment from the fate
    Of this East India broker.
    He'd everything a man of taste
    Could ever want, except a waist;
    And discontent
    His size anent,
    And bootless perseverance blind,
    Completely wrecked the peace of mind
    Of this East India broker.



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